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Proactive approach to minimize lithium pollution

Journal of Environmental Quality 2022 13 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alex Chow Alex Chow Alex Chow Alex Chow Alex Chow Alex Chow Alex Chow Alex Chow Alex Chow

Summary

This commentary called for a proactive regulatory approach to lithium pollution from the rapid expansion of lithium-ion battery technology, warning that current frameworks are inadequate to prevent accumulation of lithium in water, soil, and biota. The authors argued that lessons from other emerging contaminants like PFAS show the cost of waiting for harm to become evident before acting.

With the advancements in lithium-ion battery technology, lithium has been extensively used in many electronic products. Lithium usage is expected to increase in the coming decades. Elevated levels of lithium in the environments, including source water and biota, have been recently reported. Lithium can cause soil dispersion and aggerate swelling and can be readily taken up by plants and filter-feeders, potentially causing toxicity to plants, organisms, and human. As learnt from the reactive approach of the Clean Water Act, many emerging pollutants have not been recognized until they have been widespread and reached dangerous levels in the environments. Aftermath cleanup costs are huge, and many of these damages are irreversible. To avoid lithium being the next global contaminant of emerging concern, environmental agencies shall implement proactive regulation and education soon.

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